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Conviction

“An extraordinary journey of how far we go to fight for our family.”

7.1
2010
1h 47m
Drama
Director: Tony Goldwyn

Overview

When Betty Anne Waters' older brother Kenny is arrested for murder and sentenced to life in 1983, Betty Anne, a Massachusetts wife and mother of two, dedicates her life to overturning the murder conviction. Convinced that her brother is innocent, Betty Anne puts herself through high school, college and, finally, law school in an 18 year quest to free Kenny. With the help of best friend Abra Rice, Betty Anne pores through suspicious evidence mounted by small town cop Nancy Taylor, meticulously retracing the steps that led to Kenny's arrest. Belief in her brother - and her quest for the truth - pushes Betty Anne and her team to uncover the facts and utilize DNA evidence with the hope of exonerating Kenny.

Trailer

CONVICTION - Official Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Bloody Margins of Network Television

There’s a moment near the beginning of *The Following* pilot that lets you know how rough the ride will be. Kevin Bacon, as the damaged ex-FBI agent Ryan Hardy, calmly pours vodka into a water bottle. It’s not original—retired cop dragged back for “one last job” is TV shorthand. Still, Bacon’s movements sell it. He doesn’t swagger; he moves like someone whose every joint aches. His shoulders slump, his eyes are sunken, and he looks like a man who survived hell only to find the world around him barely tolerable.

Fox launched the show in 2013, at the moment broadcast networks were scrambling to match cable’s edgier, bloodier fare. Creator Kevin Williamson, who made a career teasing out horror tropes in *Scream*, dove into a serialized cat-and-mouse thriller. The setup grabs you: Joe Carroll (James Purefoy), a charming literature professor and confessed killer of 14 women, escapes prison after a decade of cultivating a devoted cult of murderers on the outside.

Ryan Hardy investigating a dark room

Here’s the snag. The show wraps its gore in a Poe-themed aesthetic. They scrawl “Nevermore,” they quote “The Raven,” they go digging for eyeballs in homage to “The Tell-Tale Heart.” It all feels like the writers skimmed a high school anthology and stopped there. As Carolyn Kellogg pointed out in the *Los Angeles Times*, “This is not very Poe-ish at all.” The literary angle is thin decoration for slicing people open on network time slots.

Still, despite the faux-intellectual gloss and the FBI that loses suspects with comedic regularity, I couldn’t stop watching. There’s a relentless, pulpy energy to the whole thing.

Joe Carroll inside the prison visitation room

Look at Hardy and Carroll’s interrogations. Williamson stages them like two ex-lovers bickering over custody, not the measured process of real investigations. Purefoy leans into a theatrical British flair, making Carroll smug in a way that irritates on purpose. But Bacon keeps everything grounded. This was his first time leading a network drama, and he brought a filmic seriousness to the procedural chaos. When they square off, his jaw tightens, his voice stays low. The backstory—Carroll stabbing him in a flashback, damaging his heart so badly he needs a pacemaker, a literal nod to “Tell-Tale Heart”—keeps Hardy’s vulnerability visible. He’s a hero who might actually drop from a heart attack mid-chase.

The show ran three seasons with 45 episodes of escalating, often overwhelming violence. By the time it fully leans into absurdity—cult members hiding out in suburban sleeper cells—you either surrender to the madness or you tune out.

A tense standoff in the woods

Whether that’s a problem or the point depends on how much televised cruelty you can stomach. *The Following* doesn’t claim the psychological richness of prestige dramas, and it isn’t trying to. It’s a blunt force show. But there’s something to be said for a series that knows its own DNA. It’s a trashy, furious thriller that somehow snagged a bona fide movie star and convinced him to throw himself into the mess like his life depended on it.